README

HTTP DOHC was a proof-of-concept web server showing the use of NIO
with native threads in a pure-Common Lisp implementation. In addition,
it had a novel architecture based around two distinct thread pools,
the first one doing racing accept() on initial connections to handle
the initial HTTP request-reply immediately without contention and to
do incoming request limiting, and a second thread pool servicing
keep-alive requests off of an epoll/kqueue/select socket list.
It depends on a patched version of IOLib, found at:
https://github.com/vsedach/iolib-simple-mux
I've since come to the conclusion that programming effort would be
better spent on improving the performance of Hunchentoot, rather than
developing a new incompatible web server. If you want to contribute, a
good place to start is to write a simple kqueue/epoll interface to be
used with usocket (I'm not a fan of IOLib). That can be used to add an
NIO-based thread pool to Hunchentoot.
Another thing I don't think is worth doing is manual utf8 byte buffer
management. That can be accomplished just as efficiently using the
existing Common Lisp stream abstractions. What's missing is a
convenient string library that works over utf8 byte streams and
vectors, and marshalls the implementation's internal string encoding
into utf8 at compile-time. This would be sort of like rewriting the
Common Lisp string handling functions to use utf8 internally. John
Fremlin's irregex package already provides a lot of this. That would
work great for getting high throughput on utf8 data, but people that
expect your server to also understand utf16 (like pretty much everyone
in Asia) will probably be angry at you.